468 



3. — GENERAL GROUPING OF SOUTH AUSTRALIAN 



EUCALYPTS. 



Stringybarks : — 

 E. obliqua 

 E. capitellata 

 E. macrorhyncha 



Mallees : — 

 E. Behriana 

 E. gracilis 

 E. odorata 

 E. oleosa 

 E. uncinata 

 E. cneorifolia 

 E. dumosa 

 E. calycogona 

 E. incrassata 

 E. pachyphylla 

 E. Lansdowneana 



Boxes : — 



E. olaeophora 

 E. Bosistoana 

 E. alb ens 

 E. W oollsiana 

 E. hemiphloia 

 E. largifloren* 

 E. microtheca 

 E. santali folia 

 E. Blachburniana 



Gums : — 



E. acervula 

 E. viminalis 

 E. r os 1 rata 

 E. cosmophylla 

 E. fasciculosa 

 E. leucoxylon 

 E. coriacea 

 E. cori/nocalyx 



4— SPECIES, WITH THEIR SYSTEMATIC, TECHNO- 

 LOGICAL, AND CHEMICAL DATA. 



(Arranged in order of sequence.) 



1. Eucalyptus capitellata, Sm. (Bot. New Holl., 42, 



Trans. Linn. Soc, iii., 285). 



"Stringybark." 



This species is one of the best known of the "Stringy- 

 barks" in the three States — South Australia, Victoria, and 

 New South Wales; in the latter it is called "Brown Stringy- 

 bark.'-' In South Australia it attains the greatest height of 

 all the "Stringybarks," and is one of the most valuable 

 timber-trees in the State. 



Brown, in his "Forest Flora of South Australia," figures 

 and gives a full account of the features and economics of the 

 species. 



Its botanical and chemical characters are fully described 

 in our "Eucalypts and Essential Oils," p. 149. 



2. Eucalyptus macrorhyncha, F. v. M. 

 "Red Stringybark." 



Tate, in his "Census" (Trans. Roy. Soc. S. Aus., vol. 

 xii., 1889, p. 94) records this species for South Australia, 



